The evening world. Newspaper, October 24, 1905, Page 14

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_ Pambers on th ou etree Sut: penetra ew oe = The Evening nit to 6 Park Row, New York | ni-Class Mall Matter, at NO, 16,188, Second Person, Plural. “1 have served YOU," says On that pronoun in the second rson PLURAL balances the most ate campaign issue the New York public has ever faced, It will be well for every voter to consider Mr. Jerome's “YOU.” The word includes him and his neighbor and his neighbor's neigh- bor, It includes the party boss, but ONLY as a citizen. “YOU" are the city and county of New York—if you choose to be. | “YOU" have the right and the power—if you choose to exercise them. “YOU” receive from an independent platform the recognition which) fs your due, It is yours to respond as you will. More than half of the mechanical power generated In New York, it is! estimated, is lost in belts and shafting, In a government by bosses for bosses all the people’s power is lost in the “system.” ta Think of this, too, in thinking of that “YOU.” The Moving of College Hall. In the big buildings of the Columbia University group something fess than 4,000 students are daily busy with their books. At the corner southwest of the great library of the University a com-| pany of workmen deploys daily about the College Hall and gets busy with greased beams, wooden underpinnings and jack-screws, | The Hall is of solid brick, and to the casual eye its extreme di- mension is probably seventy-five feet. It Is three stories high, There are inside walls sixteen inches thick. To the rear and to the west, more than a hundred feet, a new founda-| tion waits, Toward this, with the jack-serews and on the track of greased beams, the workmen urge the Hall, The building moves about four feet per day, ft, Students and professors go and come through trance, ‘oups of Columbia boys e! yate i Beat groups f Columbia boys gather to watch the laborers in} It is not to be doubted that even for young men who d that eve ) ropose to the world the slow moving of College Hall has its practical lessore te patience and steady application, Look Up to Aunt Salome. Down in Deer Isle, State of Maine, Aunt Salome Sellers has been having “the time of her life.” s Dr, Felix Adler has just told us very truly that it is wrong to| look up to the multi-millionaires, let us look up to Aunt Ssily, This wonderful woman is a hundred and tive years old ‘and has veen celebrating for a week, She has shaken hands with a host of people, has read a bunch of letters and has written in more than a hund: Ich of d ten a Ted au albums. Such is “the time of her life’—with a few fixings in the were family reunions. 7 Aunt Salome still enjoys a square meal and sleeps 1ik i | ENJOYS a a ‘ ¢ a child, can see, read, hear, knit and remember. She does reeled Ma. She The life at Deer Isle would pall, perhaps, upon those hustle in city markets or city ballrooms. Nevertheless the peti us| Aunt Salome and her comfortable old age is good, pi taeaaiats It is true that simple days lead easily to serene ‘wise who lives his days as simply as duty allows, AYESHA: (Copyrighted, 1904, In Great Britain and the! he } ‘United States by If Hageard.) a All the furniture fs in| the unbarred rear en- days, and that one ts wt G CHAPTERS. | * y. two Bow used too much, my dent did hap- : 1 was seate ganen Ww love and watehing her. Her head in w forme \ wide he, ind across which the clouda over | through the | out vucantly ws, Been thus, # inexpressible, amaz- 0 gaze pon It was Intox!- | f the fabled | dit was used tn- been per * world, Oris, An Kevptian and been loved by a former Incarna on 2.000 yours ugo whose rival Ayeyha Kd been. fr n and moke thelr way A el t « 6 * wW Oa ey and e and Ayesha obe in what 4 . Fevenling the withered 4 wha 1 surpass! ng figure of a mummy. A ‘ no beauty Ayosha’s face and form were tween f A , { t ly «an the Perfect, it t¥ true; but so are those of with t & some other women, Not In these then Baia tek lor er ; ‘ ve nlone, but rather, I think, es: M the soft GHE FVR_GHER HI/SGORY OF World's Home Magazine, Tuesday Evening, October 24, “My Ticket?’ By J. Campbell Cory. a {Science Says thatLight:: °°: | Is a Destroyer of Life. EW Ught has been thrown on light by Dr. G of the College of Science, N Paris, who has ma characteris! Bit a profound subject of rex search, and now invites tho attention of world to the startling consid. eration that Nght is a d that t of Lif, the foe to growth, the enemy of all ving creatures in all t live not bee ause of but In ft Nght i “We could not conceive of |ife without t" De, Bohn concedes, according | to the Chicago Tribune. evertheless ty show that the sune beams as well as the marvellous living matter, and that the nutr tioular case of the defense wh ‘ | Influence of the light, a particulur oi destruct nt to serve @ useful purpose. | “Light, above all, dees injury | cause the major part of our dises | the dootor goes not.’ Air and sunlight every of microbes, “Light burns, We all know about sunburn Acoompanies cach, betraying the catastrophes wr old Sol, The Alpine dwellers know well the fle wtlvely on y one pare Net one dread is explotted plo organisms whton Where the light goes n unimaginable number and the Uvely pain that the bright beams of burned Into thelr skin. | by the reflection of the light from the glacters ar faces with heavy | red veils. Light annihilates color, ‘This ts the peer whether natural or artificial, and ts the constant ri fthe r beSind the camera, well as the dyer and the experimente ght impedes and stunts growth, Ww vore growth of | plants, It {8 in the tropical reulms that tress a thelr grow the most rapidly; but the botanists vet A c nil during the daytime and is made during the dreamy t pical thanks to the united presence of the two f stors which really foster development, the b and tho black darkness, A clear demonstration of this Is mado by placing @ growing plant in 4 case lighted by a lateral window ep irves toward the window, and this results precisely from the fact that rhe lighted side of the plant grows less quickly than the opposite side “The ght, which {8 the agent of death, !s nevertheless the herald and bearer of life, Light is the modern physician's weapon w which to give battle to | death. Light heals the skin, vitalizes the blood, and when neither too Intense nor | too prolonged, works miracles with the prey « nd other tnsorutable | maladies, This fact is proof of its native harm he ancient medical maxim reads that ‘ Said # o Side. UMEROUS Carnegie me N herotam, including se | meth for Ret, ee dals ge ® promised ) completion, rescues on the water, a . | for bravery ata fire, Presen AA. medals to six New York firen t ea Mayor for ris thelr lives t edt Commisstoner of Ine | others shows that there ts p t 1 Rev testo teee alate miterial in the department for @ he: Ss kind roll of Sts own Tis (lc . i * ) ° n! “There {9 no denying,” says the Fy Lady's P 1 we are growing — Hoadl! t more and more good looking’ Tr t but modesty might have left this ¢ | the men to say . . . hd wo J es feta | data by the Pre that keep’ iy f prison ts not Also at : fe a 8 © who eiripped a Harlem w York, at least Fy Labs Hiab een with regard about the Much talk “ Letters from the People, # Oct. 31 Is Hallowe'en, ene ah tien, & To the Editor of The Evening World v x Hoa week, with | On what day of October does Hal- fa |towe'en fall? H. 0. fi : way | Says Tenors Have No Brains lire at s A Wife's Allowance, To the Editor of The vening Worl! - ¢ The Evening Weed: Some one once said: “When Provl- some t an & ua to the |dence gives @ man a fine tenor vice It ayo oe atinwance a hus nim nothing else.’ My experience |g s wife weekly f money, oN Se ! &o, It this was ever a 11 it swer, Sot : pms the que Once more, ter, Dut it fe truest in regard to tenor " hee very I have yet to meet a real ne ten hd F. ved Py eee who {@ also clever and v fe known | many ments 8, and both Jas a “white? man. Can any one offer w t def ettied, He thor earns & week an explanation io) ORDUADE Mrs, G,, Bath Beaoh, Confessions of an “Easy Mark. Be Ese tO" nc | To the Editor of The F anit tek New ’ | Here: is whe experience of On Cay) 5 whatever wo do, Tt will bee | mark in the gay great mistake, Just see what fearful | am twenty-cigat ‘ ud ; t with, is hae way and as a boy at echool had no am- ! révbly T think bition for study and crept or rather eof these mee An Wy was forced along by my parents’ kin Ps OF ness, and for all that was a total fail- | in all his deal BY H. RIDER HAGGARD Author of “She,” “Allan Quatermain,” ‘King Solomon’s Mines,” ete, ad Cal She-Who-M o ro ust-Be-Obeyed, That man''—and he pointed m t leopard had took my place and went . cause I ordered that ‘tek the creature, and thus As thou seest all, thou ave seen this also, Then it emphasis, and covering herself—for | never appeared unvelled to the ot the mounta fro Where has she gone, Horace?” ket Leo, To ono of her services in| W Sinetuary?" mt soe swept , we “I don't know," I answered; “but if SPrang on me, and the rest of these, my 8, T think it will be that chief's burial # ran round walting a change to aaevina.!! sirtke, which at first they could not do Wil te?" he exclaimed, and in-| Unless they would have killed me with {t, since I and the brute rolled over and atantly leaped after her. A minute of two later I thought tt wise to follow, In the sanctuary & curfous scene was in progress. Ayes.a was seated in front of the statue | Be- fore her, very mudh frightened, knelt a brawny, nd-haired chieftain and five of bis followerr, who still carried thelr wunting spears. while with folded arms and an exceedingly grim look upon his face, Leo, who. as I learned afterward fad already Interfered and been si- lenced, stood upon one aide listening to what passed At a little distance be- ‘hind wore a dozen or more of the tem- over In the snow. As {t was, one of them selzed {t with his bare hands; look at the teeth marks on his arm,’ Bo {€ they are to perish on the mountain, I, who am the man to blame, perish with them." Now, while the hunters looked af hinw with fervent gratitude tn thelr eyes, Ayesha th ° ight a litle, then eald cleve nal haa | known mightest thou have waw, and out of thelr » well w 11 condemn them, My as pleaded 4 o lord here eu are forgiven: re. who rushed In upon the leopard and ple guards, mon armed with swords who clad it Ith “ie hands sball for thelr strength and atat- rd pd advanced, Go; but T warn jand picked 1 suffer my lord t@ come into we Aner you ial never CRLApe #0 Ayesha, in her sweetest volce, WA8 ¢59)) the men as to how the | quedtioning owed ond went, still blessing dwelt er features he kin lay before |1A thelr eyes, sitice death by d and obonged in her spi leopard, of Which toe i ny ere [exmsure othe ‘imovniain shows: wee al, | ata as her, had come to @ ihe moet terrible form of punishment : a __ Wome tery may be | chief answered that they had tmeked known to tiete people, and one only Ine’ eal Ml A Roa the brute to Ite lalr between two rocks; | llcted hy the ditect ander of tee tpom w D f mastorpiewes of the Greek i 1 nud gone in and | murderers or otter great criminals, , om that ome of them hind gi (To Be Continued, : \ t clothed Uke an | wounded It, Whereon {t sprang upon him hued.) . present re, suggesting al . him down; that then the er eer year ta d , and struck him ‘ | ay! 8 Was not of earth, making her lord Loo had engaged it while the man | The Drinking Record, i ' rll id ax also struck down, af f fran tne see r as ay eea A “ oat foiling with tt on tho we ae saan irre gabees pave. Ima \" : ; 7 resting on account o there, “which As “tn | know not whether | am mad, but | know that thou art wicked! . car he stabbed and slow tho ani- talib attic ies Petbiag dae: youth tated Hointing + ings, tombe, WIth thie assn . at wis all, hich are 5,000 yee ( with thie a : ; yet leave him unharmed her wrath flamed up against x wo Adoas Mil,” sald Ayesha: “for you being hp eseruie there are’, Temaln on the favre’ M nald Ayesha, rigid wit f and his huntsmen, and rie bide 4 that | ee cee of Gruner. Divan t, cowards, that you @re THAR) men, wiving wine cups in both —_ > 1 ani fro at my side, ed messengers and sent then wo forget, rea in oatety, you left} ” thin) ONIUPT RP ¥ : did daig ft ah De keeping yourselves in @atety, are telng carried home by slaves WIAPTER XLIII. 1 Vokid, but «aw fothing except a jong Dah Aes eee t eran tilt ., xt ede my lord to the fury of this beast: | Drunken women lurch through the A . wheet tant Ri long knife Into the Lowels nis, bidding them to bear hack the aa © the moun- ate ; In Dire Peril. d ar, which at once grew limp, separated | lord Leo and to bring his companions Good. Drive them out so at the fangs {tree's followed by Ute mooking nie 5 . Blind tt Not see that | from him Weed atrunele. oF twat? ‘ Ae | tain, there to perish also at the 088) chien, Atl this, mind you, 5,000 yearg EO }ked to be w 1 my lord Is his lite? Xie Pre vers / bt All Weidniciy ts, and make ft mown that bel oes, sayy an antiquary } y ‘ tliually, so w nt ove sea. th Wit dn the blood-stained snow, iay still. | ‘U Seest what days are mine, my LL edd thom food or ehelter dies.” | Chroniene quary In the Chlaago Hou hast no) ‘Then he rose, laughing and pointing to, Holly, ay, 74 been 4! ny wi ea hrontete. aw in her i o vino diol j t y. ay, and have been these man, or tor pity or excuse, |, ae inane en vot vin vm mo and look |e rent garehents, while one of the | years” she ald; "but those hounde wi hiya eteit ratte enol "It thou wilt, At least 1 saw, and] Offering 1 reve ns rone, bowed | amine tee, Sore ate an tmssivity « ; whick er nat’ from | huntemen came forward and began to #cll pay me for this agony far os. A nied & while, | Holly ais) saw thee rolling In the snow [the chief wil tS Rud carey. cit the Meet wee yd had bean 0 Ageia ; ah oho mute | ehaennge fone wounds in hia hands und} Nor would she auter’ me to reason | sked With Chat Merce brute, while those curajand tenes Oe comrades," sali! machus Won a gold cup from ‘Alexande? Siar of.climate in tho one ahait fj Head, she mut. | thigh with strips of Iinen torn from his} with her | “Itow dost thou know anything of this tan round Ike scared children.” Btay 1 entet, give mo your arms; my| Dv drinking 14 quarts of wine ‘After this . ; Words, underrobe | Four hours later Leo returned, limp: Jmattor? ‘The i skin has not yet] "I am weary of this magic,’ inter. | Leo, “and, ¢® atm; Leonno! wal st. te Romans used to serve at thele Bh as wl x Tt ened: ahd.) ‘The vinon ished suddenly as it | Ins rte litter in which, Instead of aBlit rupted Leo, crowsly, ‘Cannot @ inan | scratch Laue this hunt together, hee would ante wih hase wines fuss : ede ) 4 r mountain, but in| had come, I felt Ayeslin leaning himself, for whom It was sent, lay al “I know because Pow.” sheanawered, | be left alone for an hour even with a| We will * oa thou? Att mad?" asked] pentine, resin and een water, Thus, inalared tet me aut as It were, T saw Leo | heavily upon my shoulder like any oti tain sheep and the skin of the |"Yhe worst hurt was above thy knee; | Jeopard of the mountain? As for those) "What docs Mowe | they thought, a fine flavor was gotten, and over at t insisted upon lis out tok r K over wild sheep and grips with a great snow leopard, while the chief and with him ran round and| round, seeking an opportunity to pierce | the savage brute with thelr spears and moun ridges, place dag him in the charge of the chiets and Suatamen of the Wibes, Withgwrhom thus batts fh Lonce tasted a wine 20) ye 1 ANT know not whether Iam mad,” he| 1 wus ao thick ‘wo had im Annis ol “put I know that thou art! with a spoon, Its flavor was #0 hore , and heard her gasp; | snow leopard that he had plaved there | hast “That danger atvo has passed by, but |to save the huntsmen the labor of carry- | gen! * ened wa fr thou dresved it with the salve I] brave men" — At this moment Oros entered ana how many are there to follow? Oh! | ing them. Ayesha was waiting for him! ‘Not 1," he sald. “But thou hast not| whispered something, bowing low, answered, rible that. ‘turpentine, resin tormented heart, how long canat,thou|in the hall of her dwelling, and gliding. left this sanctuary; how didst thou sue?| ‘As for those ‘brave men,’ I will deal Wicked and unjust. Look now, then ‘atv would, 0 doubt, have endure!" magic?" to.him—L cannot my she walked-over- By jeby with. them.” said Ayesha, with biltet these ‘hunters none pave ever it

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